Apart from Toyota, the leading manufacturers specializing in commercial vehicles include Isuzu, Hino, Mitsubishi Fuso, and UD Trucks. Their position in the domestic market has secured them a reliable and close customer base with great trust in their products.
While the total number of passengers and buses slightly increased over the past decade, the number of trucks decreased, despite trucking's ongoing relevance for freight transportation. For trucking, the labor shortage of drivers is particularly severe, resulting in a thinned-out, older workforce operating heavier vehicles.
Connectivity refers to the transmission of information via networks between vehicles or vehicles and humans. What is called vehicle telematics may improve safety, productivity, and cost-efficiency.
One of the promising combinations of vehicle telematics and automated driving is truck-platooning, where trucks synchronize to follow the driving commands of the truck in the front, potentially also lowering fuel consumption.
Although it will still take time until driver intervention becomes obsolete, the first levels of autonomous driving already positively affect the labor shortage. Advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS), like backup cameras and sensors, help potential commercial vehicle drivers, inexperienced or experienced, lowering hiring obstacles.
Commercial vehicles: not to be confused with commercial use vehicles
Automotive manufacturers and Japanese Law employ different senses of ‘commercial’ for vehicles. Commercial use in the Japanese Road Transport Vehicle Law refers to vehicles transporting goods or people against a freight rate or fare, such as public buses. Any vehicle, which is not for commercial use, is in principle for private use. Following this definition, roughly two million out of more than 81 million vehicles on Japanese roads had a registration for commercial use.Domestic market environment for commercial vehicles
Since the burst of ‘the bubble economy’ in the 1990s, the Japanese economy has grown slowly. Against this backdrop, the Japanese demographic is rapidly aging as the birth rate continues to be low, affecting demand and labor supply in the transportation sector. For example, rural depopulation locally reduces public transportation demand, at worst forcing bus lines to stop operations.While the total number of passengers and buses slightly increased over the past decade, the number of trucks decreased, despite trucking's ongoing relevance for freight transportation. For trucking, the labor shortage of drivers is particularly severe, resulting in a thinned-out, older workforce operating heavier vehicles.
The potentials of CASE for commercial vehicles
The acronym CASE summarizing recent technological trends in the automotive industry stands for connectivity, autonomous driving, sharing, and electrification. In the context of labor shortages, the first two are of special relevance.Connectivity refers to the transmission of information via networks between vehicles or vehicles and humans. What is called vehicle telematics may improve safety, productivity, and cost-efficiency.
One of the promising combinations of vehicle telematics and automated driving is truck-platooning, where trucks synchronize to follow the driving commands of the truck in the front, potentially also lowering fuel consumption.
Although it will still take time until driver intervention becomes obsolete, the first levels of autonomous driving already positively affect the labor shortage. Advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS), like backup cameras and sensors, help potential commercial vehicle drivers, inexperienced or experienced, lowering hiring obstacles.